Literature DB >> 8060907

Sexual abuse prevention with high-risk males: the roles of victim empathy and rape myths.

P A Schewe1, W O'Donohue.   

Abstract

The outcome of two sexual abuse prevention programs, one emphasizing victim empathy and the other stressing modifying rape myths, was evaluated with high-risk males. Sixty-eight high-risk males, as determined by self-reported likelihood of committing sexual abuse, were randomly assigned to an empathy-treatment, a facts-treatment, or a no-treatment control group. Treatment effects were assessed using subjects' pre- and post-treatment scores on the Likelihood of Sexually Abusing scale, the Rape Empathy Scale, the Acceptance of Interpersonal Violence scale, the Adversarial Sexual Beliefs Scale, and a test of self-reported sexual arousal to forced versus consenting sex. In addition, posttest scores on an Asch-type conformity measure were obtained. Results of validity checks indicated that high-risk subjects differed from low-risk subjects on a number of rape-related variables, that the victim-empathy condition increased subjects' empathy, and that subjects found both treatments to be credible and helpful. Comparisons between the empathy-, facts-, and no-treatment group contraindicated the practice of dispelling rape myths as a method of preventing rape among high-risk males.

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Year:  1993        PMID: 8060907

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Violence Vict        ISSN: 0886-6708


  2 in total

1.  Empathy Deficits and Perceived Permissive Environments: Sexual Harassment Perpetration on College Campuses.

Authors:  John Moore; Annelise Mennicke
Journal:  J Sex Aggress       Date:  2019-08-21

2.  Rape prevention with high-risk males: short-term outcome of two interventions.

Authors:  P A Schewe; W O'Donohue
Journal:  Arch Sex Behav       Date:  1996-10
  2 in total

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